Our Lady of the Rosary

Grace to you!
 
Roses are one of the most beautiful flowers, a special gift of nature. From the white rose to the pink, yellow, sterling silver and deep red, all roses are nature’s wonders.
 
Even if you have little appreciation for aesthetics, you can’t gaze too long at a garland of roses without been drawn to its beauty. Occasionally, I drive by neighborhoods where roses flourish, and I could hardly take my eyes off the walkways. Roses are strikingly beautiful. 
 
Have you ever received a gift of roses from someone? What did you think about the gift? Your feelings? Your emotions? Didn’t you feel honored, appreciated, and loved? 
 
Sometimes I contemplate: How would God feel if God received roses from me? I know God does not feel like we humans do, but God, who gave us the gift of sensation and feeling, surely knows what feeling means. Otherwise, God wouldn’t gift us this nature. As Sacred Scripture says, “Does He who made the ears not hear? Does He who fashioned the eye not see?” (Psalm 94:9) God surely does.
 
I believe God relates to us as our nature is. He graciously accepts our reciprocity of His love as our nature is as well. God would not expect us to relate with Him as angels, those spiritual beings; nor would God expect us to relate with Him as birds who have limited ways of expressing their “feelings” or instincts. God desires our reciprocity to be genuinely human.
 
It’s human to have feelings. God receives our feelings and pierces into the deepest of our emotions and welcomes them too. A glorious mutuality of love and affection!
 
What roses do we bring to the Lord? What colorful petals do we offer God? Everything—our life, our sacrifices, our brokenness, our sins, and our joys?
 
Let me also tell you about one of the most beautiful roses offered back to God. That rose is the Virgin Mary—the woman in whom God is much delighted and who the Lord called “Most Blessed.” She was a spotless vase of roses offered to the Lord. The vase that bore in her womb the aesthetics of God’s revelation, the fullness of God’s Glory revealed—Christ the Lord. 
 
Mother Mary’s life was adorned with roses, capturing all of the human praises and worries in the most beautiful way. Just like the praises captured through the Book of Psalms, in the Holy Rosary, the story of our salvation is rendered in beads.  The “holy rosary” literally means holy garden of roses, a bed of roses, a garland of roses, and by extension, garland beads. The Holy Rosary captures that story that found fulfillment in the womb of the Blessed Virgin Mary. “Behold the virgin shall conceive and bear a Son, you shall call him Jesus” (Is 7:14; Mt 1:23). 
 
The Blessed Virgin Mary is God’s Special Rose of Incarnation. The rosary tells the story of our salvation, on beads, rings of rosy beads, designed as images and metaphors, tangible things expressing the intangible. 
 
I love to offer God back those roses. I offer God the merits of the unique Rose of the Incarnation—the Blessed Virgin Mary. I offer the roses of divine goodness and love for us narrated throughout the beads of the rosary. Offer back to God the unique experience of my feelings and connections with the mysteries of our Christian faith as I tell that story, touching the beads.
 
Ultimately, I pray God to feel me as I feel the beads; to touch me as I touch the beads of the rosary; to cuddle me as I wrap the beads of the rosary around my palms. I want God to see in me, one of the redeemed, God’s precious child, following the footsteps of the woman most blessed, Virgin Mary, who also followed the Son, Jesus Christ. 
 
May Our Lady of the Rosary pray for us. Amen. 
 
God love you. God bless you.
 
Fr. Maurice Emelu
 
Photo by Josean, © Catholic.com 

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Fr. Maurice Emelu

The Reverend Dr. Maurice Emelu is the Chair of a number of non-profit boards and a professor of digital media and communication at John Carroll University, United States. His research and practices focus on digital storytelling and design, media aesthetics and theological aesthetics, and church communication. Dr. Emelu lives where digital media technology meets culture, communication, philosophy, theology, religion, and society. He is the founder of Gratia Vobis Ministries, Inc. To know more about his professional background, visit mauriceemelu.com

2 Comments

  1. odijvuauzq on March 12, 2021 at 5:39 am

    Muchas gracias. ?Como puedo iniciar sesion?

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